The Scientist Practitioner: Research and Accountability in Clinical and Educational Settings |
¨Ò¡´éÒ¹ã¹Ë¹Ñ§Ê×Í
¼Å¡Òäé¹ËÒ 1 - 3 ¨Ò¡ 89
˹éÒ 86
The scientist - practitioner uses such variability to formulate hypotheses about the independent variables or factors that are controlling the dependent variables or the client's problems . As an example , let us say that a client keeps ...
The scientist - practitioner uses such variability to formulate hypotheses about the independent variables or factors that are controlling the dependent variables or the client's problems . As an example , let us say that a client keeps ...
˹éÒ 107
A client is more likely to self - record sleeping , television watching , exercise , or other continuous behaviors if a duration is requested , rather than a frequency count . Similarly , the self - recording device must be appropriate ...
A client is more likely to self - record sleeping , television watching , exercise , or other continuous behaviors if a duration is requested , rather than a frequency count . Similarly , the self - recording device must be appropriate ...
˹éÒ 119
A large number of potentially desirable consequences or activities are listed . The client is instructed to rate each activity on a 5 - point scale from not at all to very much , with the rating describing how much ...
A large number of potentially desirable consequences or activities are listed . The client is instructed to rate each activity on a 5 - point scale from not at all to very much , with the rating describing how much ...
¤ÇÒÁ¤Ô´àË繨ҡ¼ÙéÍ×è¹ - à¢Õ¹º·ÇÔ¨Òóì
àÃÒäÁ辺º·ÇÔ¨Òóìã´æ ã¹áËÅè§¢éÍÁÙÅ·ÑèÇä»
à¹×éÍËÒ
2 | 38 |
Practical and Realistic Measures of Change | 71 |
SELFREPORT AND PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGICAL MEASURES | 114 |
ÅÔ¢ÊÔ·¸Ôì | |
10 à¹×éÍËÒÍ×è¹æ äÁèä´éáÊ´§äÇé
¤ÓáÅÐÇÅÕ·Õ辺ºèÍÂ
activity additional allow alternation analysis anxiety applied approach areas asked assessment attempt Barlow baseline behavior chapter clear client clinical clinical replication clinician collected compared comparison Consider consistent continue course criteria depression described determine developed direct effects elements evaluation examine example experience experimental factors failures fear Figure frequently function given goals headache important improvement increase individual intervention issue knowledge logic measures ment method methodology multiple baseline natural noted observation occur particular patient period phase change possible practice practitioner present problem procedures produce questionnaires questions reasons recorded relatively replication reported response scale seen self-monitoring self-report session settings shown similar simple single situations social specific strategy subjects success systematic taken therapist therapy time-series tion treat treatment trend usually validity variability withdrawal